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Word Analysis

desgarranchaste

Complete linguistic analysis including syllable division, pronunciation, morphology, and definitions.

5 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
5syllables

desgarranchaste

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

des-ga-rran-chas-te

Pronunciation

/des.ɡa.raŋˈʧas.te/

Stress

00100

Morphemes

des- + garr- + -aste

The word 'desgarranchaste' is a verb in the 2nd person singular preterite tense, meaning 'you tore apart.' It's divided into five syllables (des-ga-rran-chas-te) with stress on 'chas,' following standard Spanish syllabification rules.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To tear apart, shred, or rip forcefully and repeatedly.

    You tore apart/shredded/ripped.

    Desgarranchaste el papel en pedazos.

    ¿Por qué desgarranchaste mi carta?

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'chas' (1). All other syllables are unstressed (0).

Syllables

5
des/des/
ga/ɡa/
rran/raŋ/
chas/ʧas/
te/te/

des Open syllable, initial syllable.. ga Open syllable.. rran Closed syllable, contains geminate consonant 'rr'. chas Closed syllable, contains digraph 'ch', stressed syllable.. te Open syllable, final syllable.

Vowel-Centric Syllabification

Syllables are formed around vowels, with each vowel typically belonging to its own syllable.

Consonant Clusters

Consonant clusters are divided based on phonotactic constraints, keeping pronounceable sequences together.

Penultimate Stress

Words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's' are stressed on the penultimate syllable.

Geminate Consonants

Geminate consonants like 'rr' are treated as a single consonant within a syllable.

Digraphs

Digraphs like 'ch' are treated as a single consonant within a syllable.

  • The geminate consonant 'rr' is treated as a single syllable onset.
  • The digraph 'ch' is treated as a single consonant onset.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/10/2025
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